The Asian crypto ETF market continues to develop rather than mature, despite early progress.
Hong-Kong leads the region and launches Asia’s first spot for Bitcoin [BTC] and ether [ETH] ETFs in 2024.
By the end of the third quarter of 2025 AUM had reached roughly $920 million before moderating to around $340 million place BTC ETFs in January 2026.
This showed that growth is stronger in percentage terms, but that the scale remains limited.
Meanwhile, the monetary authorities of SingaporeJapan and South Korea remain cautious.
As a result, Asia is competing conceptually, but not yet structurally, positioning itself as an emerging, policy-driven follower rather than a global ETF leader.
Japan remains materially behind. The Financial Services Agency focuses on spotting Bitcoin ETFs no earlier than 2028, with legislation planned by 2026 to reclassify crypto as “specified assets,” with an emphasis on custody and investor protection.
US Spot Bitcoin ETFs: The Global Liquidity Benchmark
US spot Bitcoin ETFs significantly outperform their Asian counterparts in terms of scale, liquidity and market influence.
At the end of January 2026, the US market will hold approximately $118-120 billion AUM and over 611,000 BTC, while Hong Kong stays limited to $250-340 million.
Source: CoinGlass
This disparity reflects faster implementation of U.S. regulations, deeper capital pools, and highly efficient origination and redemption systems.
As a result, issuers like BlackRock and Fidelity dominate the flows, supported by authorized participants who convert demand for ETFs directly into spot BTC purchases or sales.
Source: CoinGlass
As a result, inflows into US ETFs often reinforce bullish momentum, while sharp outflows amplify downside moves, driving sentiment and price movement in crypto markets.
Asian ETFs largely passively track prices, while US products actively transmit macro signals, institutional positioning and risk sentiment to Bitcoin’s short-term movements.
This dynamic cements US ETFs as the key drivers of global crypto liquidity and market psychology.
ETF flows, macro risk and short-term volatility
Over the weekend, Bitcoin fell towards the $86,500-$87,000 zone gold And silver rose to new highs above $5,000/oz and $100-110/oz.
This difference underlined the dynamics of risk-on versus safe-haven in a context of increasing macro uncertainty. Bitcoin’s pullback reflected ETF-related vulnerability, layered on broader risk-shielding forces, rather than an isolated ETF shock.

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However, the strength of the yen, the risk of a US shutdown and defensive positioning remained the most important factors. ETFs amplified volatility, but did not trigger it.
Globally, US ETFs dominate activity, while Hong Kong products remain largely inactive.
Overall, US ETFs are dictating global crypto liquidity and sentiment, while Asia remains under policy constraints and macro forces continue to dominate near-term market direction.
Moreover, macro forces ultimately determine the short-term direction of cryptocurrency.
Final thoughts
- US spot Bitcoin ETFs are now anchoring global crypto liquidity, while the Asian ETF market remains fragmented, cautious and structurally underdeveloped.
- ETF flows are increasingly amplifying Bitcoin’s short-term volatility, yet macro forces, not regional ETF activity, continue to dictate market direction.
